Constance Powell Chin

Profile Updated: June 6, 2017
Constance Powell
Residing In Sunnyvale, CA USA
Spouse/Partner Ernest Ching-yi Chin (deceased)
Occupation Manager, Dept. East Asian Languages & Cultures, Stanford University
Children David, born 1976
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I worked as a journalist, first in Texas, and then I was the first American to write for the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, when it was a British publication. They kept correcting my spelling. Then I taught English at Tunghai University in Taiwan, and got married there. Was married to Ernest for 33 years.

For the past forty years I have worked at Stanford University at the Center for East Asian Studies, and now I am manager of the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures. I still have lots of opportunities to speak Chinese, and my in-laws live in China. I guess that makes me Chinese, having married into a Chinese family. How many of you have changed ethnicity?

School Story

Oberlin was a great place to fulfill my curiosity, and fuel a passion for lifetime learning. I chose to go there because of Martin Luther King, but unfortunately never had the chance to see him in person. You all know what happened the year we graduated. When I look back on it, that was one horrible year, 1968.

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Edna Chun has left an In Memory comment for Constance Powell Chin.
Jun 12, 2021 at 12:50 PM

Dear friends,

How can I do justice in writing about Connie Powell Chin, a true adventurer, exuberant lover of life, and lifelong friend? I can hear her enthusiastic voice and her upbeat laugh! A highly perceptive individual yet also very unassuming, Connie was always interested in a new vantage point, willing to explore new horizons, open to new experiences. Just as an example, I still remember vividly when we were at Oberlin her detailed and enthusiastic description of the Gullah language in South Carolina where she had lived. Her intellectual curiosity and genuine appreciation for other cultures were apparent.Just think, her master's thesis was completed in 2012 at age 66 at San Jose State while working at Stanford! It is a brilliant and highly original work illustrated with maps titled "Georgraphy and Social Structure of Monasteries: Cultural Diffusion or Convergent Evolution?"
http://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/4127/

Connie was a person of so many dimensions: teaching overseas in Hong Kong and then at Tunghai University where she met her husband, Ernest, and married on Yangmingshan. Learning foreign languages, playing the cello, always exploring. We spoke by phone before the Oberlin reunion and she told me she had cancer and wasn't sure if she would be well enough to travel. She was incredibly proud of her son, David Chin, who completed his Ph.D. at the University of California at Davis and landed a teaching job at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. https://www.umass.edu/sphhs/person/david-chin

Stanford University has created a writing prize in her honor:

https://ealc.stanford.edu/news/connie-chin-memorial-prize-writing-east-asian-studies-new-prize-created

When I spoke to her about the loss of my son, Alex, she shared with me a way to keep from breaking out into tears with a story that ended with, "Change the channel." Connie, always a brave and noble soul who is already greatly missed!

Constance Powell Chin has been added to In Memory.
Jun 11, 2021 at 7:32 PM
Jan 25, 2021 at 4:33 AM
Jan 25, 2020 at 4:36 AM
Jan 25, 2019 at 4:33 AM
Jan 25, 2018 at 4:34 AM